According to Time magazine report, Hamas commanders holding secret meetings debating whether to target United States interests in the Middle East, to oppose US policies against Hamas. Hamas commander: ‘We shouldn’t stand by idly while the Americans are plotting against us’Ynet

Commanders of Hamas’ armed wing were weighing whether to perpetrate attacks against United States targets in the Middle East, it was reported in Time magazine Saturday. According to the report, Hamas commanders held clandestine meetings in the Gaza Strip and in West Bank to discuss the possibility of targeting the United States due to their policies against Hamas and their support for Israel.

A commander of the armed wing told Time, “The US has become very hostile to the Palestinians. We shouldn’t stand by idly while the Americans are plotting against us.” He noted that Hamas chiefs felt their patience with the United States had run out and that it was time to take action against it. Israeli military sources told Time that they were aware of the debate in Hamas over whether to strike US targets. An IDF official explained that up until now, Hamas has apparently held the view that they have one enemy – Israel, and they would leave fight the US up to insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan. But such restraint might collapse if Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas moves to dismantle the government in the coming weeks. Just last Wednesday, gunmen kidnapped American national Michael Leighton Phillips, in his 20s, in Nablus. He was held hostage for 28 hours until he was released when dozens of gunmen from the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, Fatah’s armed wing, raided the site where he was being held. The Fatah operatives said they view the kidnapping as “harmful to Palestinian interests” and therefore made sure the American hostage was freed. The group that took responsibility for the kidnapping is known to be active in Iraq and is closely identified with al-Qaeda. Members of the terror group faxed a message to news agencies with a grainy photograph of Phillips’ passport and student card to announce his capture, and later demanded Israel free security prisoners in return for Phillips release. Additionally, Hamas extremists are enraged over the United States support for Abbas, especially their apparently generous fiscal support. On Friday, US governmental officials told Reuters that the US had started a campaign projected to cost up to USD 42 million to bolster Hamas’ political opponents ahead of possible early Palestinian elections

The news was also reported in the Palestinian media, which noted that the US was funding Fatah with millions of dollars, aimed at strengthening Fatah’s command. According to the reports, the United States Consulate in Jerusalem had already given USD 15 million towards boosting Fatah. It was noted that of that sum, USD 650,000 were allotted for children’s summer camps. Senior Fatah officials vehemently denied the reports.

A gunman of the Islamic Courts Union crosses a street in central Mogadishu, where the Islamist group has imposed rigid, Taliban-like order.

TORONTO – A number of young Somali-Canadians have returned to their homeland and joined a hardline Islamic militia that some call Africa’s Taliban, sources have told the National Post.

The Shabbab, a Somali youth militia whose leader is believed to have been trained by al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, includes several Canadians in its ranks, the sources said.

Somali-Canadians are also said to be serving in other militias, as well as in senior positions in Somalia’s interim government and its opponent, the Islamic Courts Union.

The Canadians are described as refugees who moved to Toronto and Ottawa in the 1990s, some of them university students, who have returned to Somalia over the past two to three years.

“Some of the militia members of the Shabbab are young diaspora members who returned to Somalia from Canada,” a leading Somalia expert, who asked not to be identified, told the Post this week.

“The Somalis who are here, and others who have recently been in, confirm that quite a few of the Shabbab are in fact diaspora members, not just from Canada but quite a few have come back from places like Pakistan.”

Some analysts believe Somalia is on the verge of becoming the next big destination for young extremist Muslims who want to participate in armed jihad.

The participation of a significant number of Canadians in the conflict has raised alarms in Ottawa, which fears Somali militia members will escalate to terrorism or return to Canada and radicalize a new wave of extremists.

It was just such a scenario that unfolded after the Soviet War in Afghanistan, when foreign volunteers became the first generation of al-Qaeda terrorists. Others returned to the West and began recruiting others into terrorism.

“I think that’s the real concern is that there’s going to be blowback after their time is done in Somalia,” the expert said in an interview. “Its very troubling.”

Somalia is one of the world’s most lawless nations. A thoroughly failed state, it has had no central government since the fall of Siad Barre in 1991. Warlords have ruled ever since but in recent months militias loyal to courts that enforce shariah Islamic law have taken control of the south.

Fighting under the banner of the Islamic Courts Union, the militias have gained popular support for their efforts to restore order, but they are also controversial because they are so similar to the Taliban, imposing rigid social restrictions such as a ban on watching World Cup soccer. Public executions have occurred as recently as yesterday.

The Shabbab, which consists of 300 to 400 young fighters of various nationalities, is a particular concern. It is headed by Aden Hashi Farah Ayro, who was allegedly trained by al-Qaeda and is blamed for the killings of international aid workers and journalists.

In his mid-30s with a turban and goatee, Ayro came out of the shadows only last month, appearing before his militias after they had captured the strategic seaport of Kismayo. Surrounded by bodyguards who looked Arab and Central Asian, he reportedly said that, “Among our militia will be Somalis and foreigners.”

“The Shabbab are very powerful,” the expert said. “They’re the shock troops, they are the commissars. They are hardliners, they are true believers. I think the closest thing you could equate them to is the mujahedin,” said the expert, using the term for Islamic holy warriors.

While the Shabbab serves as the military youth wing of the Islamic Courts, it is uncertain whether the courts and their leaders exert any real control over the jihadist militia.

“What that means is you’ve got some kids who may or may not be under the control of political leaders and that’s the big question, we simply don’t have an answer for whether they are answering to anyone but themselves.”

Adam Esse, a leading member of Toronto’s large Somali community, said Somali-Canadians have long been returning to their homeland for family and business reasons.

“It could be Canada is not good for everybody,” he said.

He said he knows of one Canadian who now holds a senior position in the Islamic Courts, but he was unaware of any Canadians who had joined the militias.

“Could be but I haven’t heard,” he said. “I heard only one person…. I know him personally but he left here a long time ago. Recently I heard that he was one of the leaders.”

During a visit to Somalia last year, Mr. Esse said he learned that 11 ministers and deputies in the interim government were Canadians. He said it was also possible Somali-Canadians had joined the militias. “I’m not denying, what I’m saying is I haven’t heard of it.”

Canada is home to tens of thousands of citizens of Somali origin, mostly refugees who migrated in the 1990s. The majority live in Toronto but Ottawa also has a significant Somali-Canadian community.

While Somalis are generally considered moderates, there have been indications of radicalization within the community, including the arrest last summer of two Somali-Canadians accused of supplying weapons to an alleged Toronto-based terror group inspired by al-Qaeda.

Mohammed Abdullah Warsame, who was born in Mogadishu and emigrated to Canada in 1989, is accused of training at two terrorist camps in Afghanistan. An FBI affidavit says the Toronto resident taught English at the camps and once met Osama bin Laden, whom he found “inspirational.” Al-Qaeda paid for his return to Toronto in April 2001, the FBI says. He was arrested in Minneapolis in 2003.

Like the Taliban, the Islamic Courts have been accused of links to terrorism. Islamic Courts leader Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys is on the Canadian and United Nations lists of restricted terrorists, and has been accused of harboring terrorists wanted for attacks such as the bombings of two American embassies in 1998.

The UN said Thursday it was pulling its staff out of areas controlled by the Islamic Courts, citing written death threats. On Sept. 17, an Italian nun was murdered in Mogadishu, following controversial comments made by the Pope. A Swedish journalist was also recently murdered. A suicide bomber attempted to assassinate the president of the interim government, Abdullah Yusuf, last month.

“The courts are associated with international terrorist groups like al-Qaeda,” the prime minister of Somalia’s transitional government, Ali Mohamed Gedi, said in a statement last month.

“The Islamic courts brought weapons, other explosives and foreign fighters to Somalia. Wherever they go they deny people the right to freedom of speech, rights of association and entertainment.”

Hassan Shire Sheikh, Uganda-based coordinator of the African Human Rights Defenders Project at York University, said it was difficult to come up with “meaningful information” about the presence of Canadians in the executive and military wing of the Islamic Courts.

“According to a little information available to me … there are a good number of Somalis with various Western naturalized citizenships within the rank and the file of the ICU, and [that] may warrant more systematic investigations.”

A source in Mogadishu said there were Canadians in the Islamic Courts movement. “Some of the ICU members are mixed, Somali-American, Somali-Canadian. Primarily they are in the business sector,” he said.

sbell@nationalpost.com

SOMALIA TIMELINE

1960: British and Italian parts of Somalia merge and gain independence.

1969: Muhammad Siad Barre comes to power in a coup.

1974: Widespread drought and starvation.

1991: Barre is ousted, warlords take over.

1992: U.S. Marines deploy to Mogadishu, paving the way for a UN peacekeeping force that includes Canadians.

1995: UN Peacekeepers leave.

1990s: Tens of thousands of Somalis take refuge in Canada.

2000: New government chosen.

2001: Another drought hits.

2004: A Transitional Government is chosen.

June 2006: Militias loyal to the Islamic Courts Union take control of Mogadishu and the south. A stand-off between the Transitional Government and Islamic Courts ensues.

7 October 2006: Keith ELLISON, candidate for Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District and a former member of the Nation of Islam, has received nearly twice as much money in campaign contributions than his opponent, Alan FINE. In a brochure sent by FINE to 100,000 voters, ELLISON was criticized for accepting campaign contributions from questionable sources “having ties to Islamic terrorism.” Equally important but receiving scant attention is the stated objective of Omar AHMAD, a significant donor to ELLISON’S campaign: “Islam isn’t in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant. The Qur’an should be the highest authority in America, and Islam the only accepted religion on earth”

In September, we raised the issue of a potential constitutional crisis should ELLISON decide to practice his religion, which would require him to swear his allegiance to Sharia over the US constitution.

Now, we are looking at the validity of the charges raised by Alan FINE:

Truth or Political Rhetoric?

Ellison has received financial contributions and other assistance from executives at CAIR. Two CAIR officials have been convicted on terrorism charges: CAIR’s former communications and civil rights coordinator was convicted in 2004 on terror-related charges of plotting to wage violent jihad against the U.S., and the founder of its Texas branch was convicted of terror-related charges.

Also among those who have contributed money to the candidate are an official from a group that participated in a “tribute” to the Islamic Iranian tyrant Ayatollah Khomenei.

Donors:

HAMMAD, Nehad; 7/22/2006; $2,000.00, Alexandria, VA

–A founding member of CAIR and the public relations director of the Islamic Association of Palestine (IAP); A civil court judge in Illinois declared that there was “strong evidence that IAP was supporting HAMAS.”

–Helped post bail for Abdelhaleem Ashqar; Ashqar was indicted in August 2004 on racketeering conspiracy charges in Chicago for allegedly raising millions of dollars for the Islamic Resistance Movement, or HAMAS..

–An official with the Peace and Justice Foundation, whose president was a featured speaker at a December 2004 event titled, “A tribute to the great Islamic visionary Ayatollah Khomenei.”

OMEISH, Esam; 4/24/2006; $500.00, Alexandria, VA Self/Physician:

–President of the Muslim American Society, which authorities believe is the political front in the U.S. for the Muslim Brotherhood, the ideological forerunner of al Qaeda and a variety of other Islamic terrorist organizations.

Should we be concerned? That is a questions that the voters will ultimately decide.